PRINCETON - A Princeton University student organization that led protests last year calling for more inclusivity for students of color was disappointed with the university's recent decision to not uphold one of those demands.

The university's decision - announced Monday morning - comes months after the league held protests in November. During the protests, students called for the university to acknowledge Wilson's "racist legacy," and to remove his name from campus.

The university put together a committee comprised of members of the board of trustees to examine the demand. The committee met with faculty, students and staff at the university for weeks. They announced Monday that, while they agreed Wilson had racist values, they would not be removing his name.

Instead, they called for, "an expanded and more vigorous commitment to diversity and inclusion at Princeton, with concerted efforts not only to implement a broad range of existing initiatives, but to take additional actions," according to their statement.

"Princeton remains unable to even reckon and wrestle with its white supremacist foundations and its ongoing role in perpetuating racism," the league wrote in a statement published online Monday afternoon.

They took issue -in part - with the university's argument that Wilson, despite his racism and segregationist values, brought positive change to Princeton University in the early 1900's.

"Princeton's decision today demonstrates unambiguously its commitment to symbols and legacies of anti-Blackness in the name of 'history' and 'tradition,'" they wrote.

But the league did not focus all of their attention on the Wilson decision.

As they have argued in the past, their demand that Wilson's name be removed from campus, was only one of multiple demands.

The other demands included creating cultural competency training for faculty and staff, having issues regarding diversity incorporated into general education requirements and creation of a black culture space.

None of those demands has been met either, the league said Monday.

Though they wrote that they were discouraged by the university's decision, they will not be deterred.

"We join a growing contingent of Black students who recognize the limits of academic institutions as pioneers of transformative social justice," They wrote, and said they would press on for change.